Lt. Alexander Sharp Jr.

(1855-1910)

By Patrick McSherry

General:

Lt. Alexander Sharp, Jr., served as an aide to Assistant Secretary
of the Navy, Theodore Roosevelt, and also commanded
the U.S.S. VIXEN during the Spanish American War. He took part in the the
Battle
of Santiago.

Biography:

Alexander Sharp, Jr., born in Missouri in 1855, was the son of a
navy paymaster and the nephew of Civil War general and president, U.S.
Grant.

Sharp entered the Naval Academy at Annapolis in June of 1870, being
appointed from the District of Columbia. Sharp had joined the navy at a
low point in its history, when the navy virtually went of our existence.
Its ships were antiquated, promotion slow, and the majority of the ships’
crew were made up of men who were not citizens of the U.S.

On May 11, 1873, Sharp was promoted to midshipman, to ensign on July
18, 1876 and then to master on April 8, 1882. It was not until March 3,
1883 that he was finally advanced to rank of lieutenant, junior grade,
having been in the navy for over 13 years. This was the rank he would still
hold at the time of the Spanish American War. On October 29, 1884, Sharp
married Miss Josephine “Josie” Hand in Yankton, South Dakota.

In the year prior to the Spanish American War, Sharp was assigned
to the office of the assistant secretary of the navy, Theodore
Roosevelt. Roosevelt described him in his autobiography
as being a “first-class fellow.” Before Roosevelt left to join the 1st
U.S. Volunteer Cavalry (the “Rough Riders”),
he had Sharp appointed to the command of the U.S.S. VIXEN. Later, when
Roosevelt’s Rough Riders approached the shore
at the Daiquiri landing point aboard the Army
transportYUCATAN, by chance,
the VIXEN was present. Sharp provided the YUCATAN
with a pilot that got the ship close into shore, unlike many of the other
transports who had no pilots.

The U.S.S. VIXEN was a formerly the yacht JOSEPHINE which had been
armed as a patrol boat. She was 182 feet long, displaced 806 tons and mounted
four six-pounders and four one-pounders. During Spanish American War she
operated on the Cuban blockade, carrying messages, ferrying prisoners,
carrying communications between vessels and communicating with Cuban insurgents.
She took part in the bombardments of Santiago between June 13 and June
17.

During the Battle of Santiago on July
3, 1898, the VIXEN was involved, but generally as an observer. She was
not within range to use her own guns, but did get fired on by the Spanish
vessels. She very briefly engaged the VIZCAYA
before that vessel surrendered.

Very shortly after the war’s fighting ended and armistice was agreed
to between the U.S. and Spain, Sharp was promoted to lieutenant in August
of 1898. Following the war, Sharp, promoted to lieutenant commander, served
aboard the venerable U.S.S. HARTFORD of Civil War fame. Later, he was called
to testify at the investigation into the actions of Winfield Scott Schley
at Santiago.

During the world cruise of the American battle fleet, later called
the “Great White Fleet,” from 1907 to 1909, Sharp accompanied the fleet.
After the fleet arrived in San Francisco, California, and was preparing
to set out across the Pacific Ocean, Captain Sharp was ordered to command
the battleship U.S.S. VIRGINIA, succeeding Capt. Seaton Schroeder. Sharp
commanded the vessel for the remainder of the cruise. Schroeder commented
“I could only find comfort and pleasure in the assurance of the ship being
in able hands.” Sharp noted that he found the VIRGINIA to be “…in the way
of organization and efficiency, to be about as near perfection as it is
possible for ship to be.”

Capt. Sharp returned to the U.S. with the fleet in 1909. Unfortunately,
he died on February 9, 1910. Josephine survived until 1932. Capr. Sharp
and his wife were buried at Arlington National Cemetery.

Sharp’s son and namesake went on to serve as a vice admiral in the
U.S. Navy.

Arlington National Cemetery Website (dates of birth/death, and data
on Sharp’s son - oddly, he is identified in the cemetery as Alexander Sharp,
and his son, born 1888 as Alexander Sharp, Jr. However, the Navy Registers
– see below – clearly identify the Alexander Sharp who joined the navy
in 1870 as “Alexander Sharp Jr.” and Sharp’s report of the Battle of Santiago
is also signed as Alexander Sharp, Jr.)

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